Gov't Report on Youth, Pornography, And The Internet 76
Frisky070802 writes "I don't recall seeing this already, nor am I finding it when searching for it ... the National Academies commissioned a report on how youths are affected by child pornography, predators, and other threats on the net. They've issued a 400-page report
on their findings, which are very extensive, and were used to support the argument for the new kids.us domain."
Re:Umm (Score:1, Offtopic)
People get whacked in the head and do crazy things. The reason for them being whacked in the head is what people should try to understand, not fight against the things people do. Find the source and deal with it, not only the symptoms.
Re:Umm (Score:3, Insightful)
No, these aren't real statistics, but I would say that, judging by what you see on porn sites ("barely legal" is HUGELY popular) it is not too far off to say most men have an attraction in some form to young (14->18), yet developed, girls.
I'm not saying make it legal to make of course, just that you aren't a sick pedophile who is going to assault girls if you find an 18 year old attractive (sexually). There isn't even a close correlation.
Children 14 (ie before they have developed sexually) is a whole other bag of hammers.
Re:Umm (Score:1)
No, these aren't real statistics, but I would say that, judging by what you see on porn sites ("barely legal" is HUGELY popular) it is not too far off to say most men have an attraction in some form to young (14->18), yet developed, girls.
I'm not saying make it legal to make of course, just that you aren't a sick pedophile who is going to assault girls if you find an 18 year old attractive (sexually). There isn't even a close correlation.
Children 14 (ie before they have developed sexually) is a whole other bag of hammers.
I chalk a lot of it up as backlash to the "silicon queens" that currently dominate "western societies view of what female sex objects should look like."
Hell now days if they aren't young enough to still have some baby fat on them odds are they have starved every possible inch of natural flesh off. . . .
Re:Umm (Score:1)
Re:Umm (Score:1)
Try telling that to your GF/wife/whatever.
Also known as instant divorce (tm) by many speculators.
Re:Umm (Score:1, Flamebait)
Yes, I'm a vegetarian....
Re:Umm (Score:1, Offtopic)
Look, it breaks down like this: things that want to be eaten taste good, things that don't want to be eaten taste bad. Fruit wants you to eat it, so it's nice and yummy. Some plants like juniper don't want to be eaten, so they taste bad.
Cows taste good, therefore, they must want to be eaten. If they didn't, surely they would have evolved foul tasting meat by now. As soon as cows stop tasting good, I'll stop eating them and move on to tasier animals.
Who the hell do you think you are, denying cows their wish to become delicious pastrami sandwiches?
I was vegetarian for about ten years, vegan for about eight of those. I don't think that gives me any sort of position of authority on the issue, I just don't want you thinking that I haven't thought this out.
Re:Umm (Score:1, Insightful)
"Teenagers are supposed to experiment with sex to get prepared for adult life."
What basis do you have for that? I believe that teenage, extra-marital sex is just a sign of weakness, letting yourself be controlled by carnal urges. To say that that is a sign or a predecesor to maturity is, in my opinion, incorrect. It takes more maturity to resist desires and save yourself for marriage than to give in to whims. Anyway, I'm sure most people stopped reading at the first line, so I'll stop responding.
Derek
valid reason (Score:1)
Re:valid reason (Score:1)
IANAL but it's my understanding that most states have a 3- or 4-year window to prevent that from happening, so if two people are sufficiently close in age, their birthdays don't really matter. It doesn't make sense that a relationship which was legal yesterday can be illegal today without a change in laws.
Re:Umm (Score:2)
Re:Umm (Score:1)
Re:Umm (Score:3)
Or if (he|she) runs a webcam and starts masturbating.
Re:Umm (Score:2)
I think there's a more fundamental problem in that Parents believe their children are their "their possession" and molecoddle them causing an over-individualised society. Whether or not the Government should interfere with this, I don't know.
Wrong report (Score:5, Interesting)
From the conclusion in section 14.1:
It might be useful for someone to produce a 400+ page report examining the above stated and widely-held belief that Internet access is going to magically "enhance and transform education for the nation's youth". I, for one, am not sure that filling cash-strapped schools with computer equipment is somehow going to result in brighter children than if we just stuck to the basics.
GMD
Re:Wrong report (Score:4, Insightful)
On a side note, I made a bit of an attempt to create a piece of software to do just this over at Sourceforge, and while it appeared to be feasible to me and I did some proof of concept type stuff, my job has been killing me with hours and I have not had time to get anywhere with it. Its the eduonline project. If you have an interest in doing something like this, check it out on sourceforge and let me know.
Re:Wrong report (Score:4, Insightful)
Not the goal, but a very oft-cited goal among schools I have been to and worked with. Heck, I even went to one of the schools that was involved with the Microsoft/Toshiba Anytime, Anywhere Learning [www.aal.be] project. The whole idea of it is that computer technology has some magical ability to help teach kids. We had laptops assigned to every kid, we had the entire school wired for networking, and were jacked into the 'net all through class.
Of course, the whole thing was a complete bomb. Teachers didn't know how to use the Internet. Kids spent more time in Yahoo chatrooms than following whatever website the teacher wanted them to be following along in. E-textbooks need to die. And, of course, kids learned very quickly about all the webistes out there that catalog thousands of papers for them to plagarise.
Not to say that kids don't learn from the 'net. The 'net got me involved in the demoscene and open source, which taught me to program. Various political sites gave me access to information about the world that I never would have touched any other time. I can't begin to say how liberating some BBSes were when I was 11, and when Prodigy gave its users Internet access, it gave me oppotrunites to think that I never would have otherwise had growing up in a town of 7,000.
That, and I found a lot of porn. And jerked off. I have a hard time saying that was unhealthy, though, especially from the studies I've read giving evidence that boys who are exposed to a lot of porn as adolescents have a tendency to be much more well-adjusted sexually, more likely to use condoms, &c.
Re:Wrong report (Score:2)
Filtering and .kids.us (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Filtering and .kids.us (Score:5, Insightful)
The biggest problem with the idea of .kids.us is that you would have to take away one of the biggest advantages of the Internet in the first place -- its ability to interact with other people.
Things you couldn't do on .kids.us:
... at least without 24-hour moderation of all materials that would be posted. And who will pay for those expenses?
Re:Filtering and .kids.us (Score:1)
Re:Filtering and .kids.us (Score:2)
Grab all the porn you can while you're 9 because your time's running out!!! Once you hit 10, the floodgates swing shut
How excessive! (Score:5, Funny)
Well, these are all things that I like. I don't need 400 pages to talk about it though.
Re:Youth, pornography, and the Internet (Score:1, Offtopic)
New federal bureau, coming soon!! (Score:2, Funny)
The Federal Bureau of Youth, Pornography, And The Internet would complement The Federal Bureau Of Alcohol, Tobacco, And Firearms just beautifully!
Ali
Re:New federal bureau, coming soon!! (Score:2)
Whitelist (Score:5, Insightful)
kids.us is a humungous, unwieldy, unworkable, whitelist. (But at least it's
Be glad it's .us (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Whitelist (Score:2, Insightful)
My experience on filters is that they can work; however, I've had many times where I could access a sexual explicite website, but couldn't access websites pertaining to technical information. My example was not being able to access a VRML website while I was researching for a project.
Whitelisting while blocking off alot of good content can pretty much block out all the bad content. If your whitelisting your email, chances are your aren't going to get spam unless it's from a virus. I do agree that censorship sucks; however, providing a know safe area for children while not trying to remove things is the best we'll probably get.
If you had a younger child would you feel better about having an option where they can visit only a website pertaining to say Big Bird, or Nickelodeon child shows and not let them access other things? It's true that parental supervision is still important; however, letting your children visit .kids.us by themselves, and letting them have more full access while you can properly supervise them is pretty appealing.
Re:Whitelist (Score:3, Insightful)
Is it appropriate for a young child to see a rendition of Michaelangelo's David? That's a matter of opinion: some would say yes - it's a classic piece of art and it's good for kids to be exposed to culture. Others would say no - his naughty bits are hanging out and it's bad for kids to see a naked human body. Some parents don't want their kids seeing Harry Potter but think it's perfectly fine for them to read fundamentalist Christian religous tracts, while others have the complete opposite view.
So who gets to say what can go in .kids.us and what can't? If the Jerry Fallwells of the world were in charge, chicktracts.kids.us would be perfectly fine, but witchvox.kids.us or harrypotter.kids.us wouldn't be. I'm not willing to allow anyone other than myself and my wife what is or is not appropriate for our children to see.
Sex vs. Violence (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:3, Interesting)
Umm, you haven't seen too many American movies, have you?
Showing actual non-simulated sex is pornography, and is legal with age limits. Showing actual non-simulated murder would be a snuff film, and if anyone did it, they'd go to jail.
Hell, nudity and sex won't even get you past a PG-13 any more, as demonstrated by the new film of Solaris.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, that's not currently correct -- while there are many arguments whether the law should ban simulated sex with minors, it does not at the moment, as per a Supreme Court ruling earlier this year.
And snuff films (if they existed) would be illegal -- see here [snopes.com] for the snopes.com write-up of the furor surrounding the US release of the fake snuff film `Snuff' in 1976.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:1)
just my
k.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:2)
Your linkage is nice, but doesn't show in any way that snuff films would be "illegal" in the U.S. naturally, they'd be illegal to produce because the production woul;d involve crimes including murder. However, distribution by a third party not involved in the production would only possibly illegal under obscenity statutes, which vary from state to state, and in more liberal jurisdictions such distribution wouldn't be considered obscenity and hence would be legal. As for possession, in the U.S. the only images/videos it can be illegal to possess are those involving child pornography--possession of obscene materials is perfectly legal in the U.S. as long as they don't involve minors and the possession doesn't include distribution.
So, producing or in any way being directly involved in a snuff film would be illegal. The film itself would in no way be illegal to possess, and would be legal to distribute in some jurisdictions but not in others.
The sole reason the police or FBI have "confiscated" suspected snuff films in the past is because they have been potential evidence of a crime.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:1, Insightful)
Nah, in the movie JFK they showed footage of the Zapruder film, and lots of documentaries included that footage of a Vietcong being shot by a police cheif. Nothing illegal with showing someone getting murdered.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:2)
Not all film of murders are illegal, but snuff films are -- follow the link I posted elsewhere in this thread.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm going to totally ignore what adults have told me through my teenage years. Actions speak louder than words, and I've seen a lot of adults acting in my life.
The distinction is simple: Violence is a perfectly reasonable and effective way to solve your problems with other people. Sex is at best a guilty pleasure.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:3, Informative)
It's not a "safe haven" if you're stuffing Johnny into a box so that he can't get the porn he's actively seeking out. He's not *fleeing* it, he's looking for it.
I sure hope you don't approve of kids watching TV, too, unless shooting people is okay but porn isn't.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:3, Flamebait)
Thou shall not kill, but pictures of people doing that are just fine. So Sayeth The Lawwwward!
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:1)
I agree that is disturbing.
Part of the reason may be that, until parts of the last century, it would have been a lot easier for kids to experiment with sex than with violence. Now that kids are getting more dangerous weapons more often, perhaps society will have to revisit how important childhood exposure to violence is, as compared to exposure to sex.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:3, Interesting)
For example, look at the venerable Loony Toons. How many times does Bugs make Fudd shoot himself? Or cause other bodily harm to Fudd? But this is just normal good slap-stick comedy.
Also, how many TV shows do we have out there now that have no problem showing a shoot-out In all its gory detail?
But God help us if a breast pops out. Personally I'd much rather we turned this sort of thing around a bit. Lets go ahead and show naked people on TV, both women and men. I don't mean hardcore porn, that is probably a bit too much, but why not allow TV shows to show nudity? And, at the same time, lets start treating violence with the draconian measures we have used for sex. No more showing people getting shot, no more blood everywhere, save that sort of stuff for the cable channels and movies. Sure they would still be able to imply violence, (i.e. you see a guy with a gun pointed at him, camera pans to a window, you hear a gun shot.) but not show it.
Afterall, sex is a natural thing, and a good thing. Teenages shouldn't be made to feel ashamed for wanting to explore it. And it shouldn't bother parents to discus it with thier children. If anything, the parents should be the ones who control the child's introduction to it. A teen-age boy is going to get a hold of porn. He's going to find something to look at while he masturbates his willy raw. You aren't going to stop them, so why not make a descion as to what it will be?
Let me stop and ask a question, how many of us searched our parents room when they were out? How many of us found the Playboy or Penthouse, or better yet the movie Dad had stashed away somewhere? I did, those were my first experiences of human sexuality. And, if I am cursed with kids, I have every intention of having a few items "hidden" in the house. I'll make sure those items are carefully selected to present a view of sex, to my child, that most agrees with my beliefs. If I have a kid, I it want to know that sex is a good thing, and that violence should be used only when other methods fail. One way to do that is to control what input that child gets, and I intend to do just that. And it would be nice if the media helped out just a bit.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:1)
It seems to me that your view on human sexuality is vastly more healthy (and more true) than mainstream views.
However, I would contend that violence does have a purpose and even a need, but only as a form of education. As it is violence is ridiculously glorified. Really, the same goes for irresponsible sex (listened to any rap lately?).
Not showing these things is not the answer. These things should be shown, so that people can learn from them.
Re:Sex vs. Violence (Score:1)
The only discussion that really interested me regarded a Radiohead video that had been partially censored in the U.S. and Canada. For different things. In the U.S., they cut out all the sex. In Canada, they cut out all the violence.
That brings to mind a possible problem here. Who will set the standard and what are they going to allow that some large percentage of parents won't get pissed off about? Sex education? Evolution? Religion? Politics? I mean, access to stuff your parents/community doesn't want you to see is in some ways a saving grace of the internet. Because there's still lots of parents telling their kids that pregnancy happens when a boy sees a girl in a swimsuit. Or Buddhism = evil. Or hey, how about foreign = untrustworthy/dangerous.
I do agree that simply saying, "parents, ya gotta watch your kids" is an impossible oversimplification. No one questions the need to protect our kids. But I firmly believe that a little education and communication goes a lot farther than filters and a separate net can. There will always be Johnny next door with the real thing.
Slashdotted??? (Score:2, Funny)
Gimme, gimme, gimme :)
"Kids" is problematic (Score:3, Insightful)
"Adults" to "Children" (Score:1)
Children will love *.kids.us because it is completely hand filtered/checked by adults. Children love regurgitated garbage, they want you to feed them more garbage (school just isn't enough for them).
Children don't want to learn useful things. It's impossible that they would want to know how the world works. What they really want to know is how to light buildings on fire and shoot each other. The reason they want to know these things is because they are bad. Just like humans and adults. We cannot let them know these bad things.
Children are not to be confused with adults. They are very different. In fact they aren't even considered human, which is why the adults don't apply the United States Constitution like the adults apply it to themselves.
The internet is one big filthy pot that corrupts these sub-humans. We must protect the children.
+1 Sarcasm (Score:2)
+1 Funny sometimes just doesn't apply
+1 Insightful doesn't either
Sometime sarcasm can combine the two.
Youth, Pornography, and the Internet. (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, my kids won't have the free reign over the net that I had. Yet, I don't doubt that any offspring of mine will have an overabundance of porn sprung upon them. I mean, christ, you can't search for an
Is this a good thing, or a bad thing? I mean, no sane parent is going to say, "Woohoo! My kids found some porn!" On the other hand, porn, and sex itself, is still covered in a Victorian obscurity. I can't help but wonder if a greater awareness of, "Yes, people boff. People boff a lot." wouldn't result in the slowing of the spread of various diseases and such.
Anyway, enough rambling. Some domain name won't work. As someone else pointed out, kids don't like being called kids, and you won't catch one over the age of twelve browsing anything that ends in
Why .kids.us isn't a great idea; why I'm for it (Score:3, Interesting)
As many people have pointed out in this forum already, Adolescents often _want_ to see the porn that's out there, and are smart enough to just close the window when (if?) they don't want it. While some adolescents may be traumatized by having porn made of them, looking at it certainly won't hurt them. If it broadens their horizons a bit, I would call that a Good Thing (TM).
Now, here's why I'm all for doing this:
Congress has been trying to censor the internet longer than I've been using it. Every time, the supreme court whacks them down, but they just don't seem to get the picture. Instituting
so.... (Score:2, Funny)
Porn and Youth go together on the 'Net (Score:1)
Re:Porn and Youth go together on the 'Net (Score:2)
whitehouse.com (Score:1)
Then again, that *was* during the Clinton administration, so maybe whitehouse.gov would have gotten the whitehouse.xxx domain.